Wednesday, May 8th 2024

Report: 3 Out of 4 Laptop PCs Sold in 2027 will be AI Laptop PCs

Personal computers (PCs) have been used as the major productivity device for several decades. But now we are entering a new era of PCs based on artificial intelligence (AI), thanks to the boom witnessed in generative AI (GenAI). We believe the inventory correction and demand weakness in the global PC market have already normalized, with the impacts from COVID-19 largely being factored in. All this has created a comparatively healthy backdrop for reshaping the PC industry. Counterpoint estimates that almost half a billion AI laptop PCs will be sold during the 2023-2027 period, with AI PCs reviving the replacement demand.

Counterpoint separates GenAI laptop PCs into three categories - AI basic laptop, AI-advanced laptop and AI-capable laptop - based on different levels of computational performance, corresponding use cases and the efficiency of computational performance. We believe AI basic laptops, which are already in the market, can perform basic AI tasks but not completely GenAI tasks and, starting this year, will be supplanted by more AI-advanced and AI-capable models with enough TOPS (tera operations per second) powered by NPU (neural processing unit) or GPU (graphics processing unit) to perform the advanced GenAI tasks really well.
Commenting on the GenAI adoption in PCs, Senior Analyst William Li said, "Counterpoint forecasts that the penetration of AI-advanced laptops, which will form a majority of the AI laptop PC segment, will pick up in the next two years as chip vendors scale the GenAI capability to mainstream tiers. With the proliferation of GenAI use cases at the edge or in the cloud or in a hybrid way in the next few years, GenAI will become a de facto and must-have capability in the PC segment. Building the right kind of tools and ecosystem will be crucial for this adoption. Players such as Qualcomm have already accelerated with partners such as Microsoft, Hugging Face and a set of advanced AI Stack toolsets, developer evangelism."

Li added, "While the overall laptop PC market will register ~3% CAGR during 2023-2027, the AI laptop PC segment is bound to grow at 59% CAGR. The advanced semiconductor content from compute to memory will drive a positive ASP (average selling price) growth associated with newer GenAI capabilities, translating into more value for consumers than before. In addition, we estimate that AI laptop PCs with the ability to run advanced GenAI applications will account for every three out of four laptop PCs sold in 2027."

The chip vendors are playing a major role in driving GenAI in PCs. Highlighting the trend, Associate Director Brady Wang said, "The first wave of AI PCs will gradually come up with three major CPU platforms - Intel Meteor Lake, AMD Hawk Point and Qualcomm Snapdragon X Elite series. These vendors are also preparing for next-generation solutions for AI laptop PCs rolling out later this year, which will accelerate the adoption of AI PCs at multiple price points. We believe Intel and AMD will also take GenAI-capable compute mainstream next year to compete with relatively efficient Arm-based Qualcomm and Apple solutions in this AI race."

Wang added, "At the same time, we expect an upward trend in AI-capable laptops, which leverage high-level to premium-level GPUs to enable even higher-end GenAI applications. This will range from current large language models (LLMs) processed at the edge to advanced large models and even autonomous gaming graphics generating (AI Gfx) models. Players like NVIDIA will look to extend their capabilities and leadership in this segment."

Generative AI supported by both Cloud and Edge
The adoption of GenAI in computing, which was initially solely dependent on the cloud, warrants higher computational capability and performance, from training the model to inferencing millions of potential requests per second. However, this is not feasible as well as viable from capacity, cost and energy perspectives. As a result, GenAI capability at the edge or in the PC becomes paramount.

Further, besides better work efficiency, data privacy and security are also important, which can be facilitated by GenAI applications at the edge. This also becomes pivotal to AI at the edge to preserve data sovereignty and environmental efficiency.

Commenting on GenAI use cases, Associate Director Mohit Agrawal said, "Initial GenAI adoption in the PC will be driven by Microsoft through its Copilot AI deeply integrated across Microsoft properties and further in upcoming Windows 12 along with app developers and partners such as OpenAI, Adobe and Hugging Face, which will catalyze the GenAI and overall AI experiences, initially around productivity and content creation in the PC. It remains to be seen how AI-powered Windows 12 charts upgrade path and AI capabilities for the existing installed base of devices which might not support necessary hardware capabilities to run GenAI applications natively."

Agrawal added, "Apple could be the dark horse when it comes to adding GenAI capability in the Macs. The company can use its end-to-end vertical approach to leverage its self-designed Arm-based M series of advanced powerful processors, heavily optimized macOS, newly designed LLM and powerful GenAI application ecosystem."
Source: Counterpoint Research
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28 Comments on Report: 3 Out of 4 Laptop PCs Sold in 2027 will be AI Laptop PCs

#1
mb194dc
Why are normal consumers going to be interested in / LLMs / AI ? Because Jensen Huang tells them they should be? What's the supposed use case for it that'll run on your local machine and be useful for anything ?

It's a load of BS, isn't it?
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#2
P4-630
Some people just browse and email on a laptop just like my dad, he doesn't need this shit.
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#3
Denver
As if people had a choice...
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#4
TumbleGeorge
If parameters didn't increase much above today's these laptops will be funny stupid.
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#5
Eternit
At least 1/4 will be proper laptops.
Governments should introduce AI tax.
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#6
JIWIL
TLDR We're expecting some laptops to be sold in the next few years.
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#7
Kn0xxPT
In my view about this consumer "AI", its a way to offload large AI supercomputers from top internet providers.
So in theory, if more consumers get LLM's, more data can be gathered/processed from those clients to a central LLM.
Benefits ? Google, OpenAI, Meta, if people start (forced,cof cof) using "AI tools/services", less investment needed in infrastructure of companys....
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#8
Onasi
These laptops sure do be artificial, but how much intelligence will be involved will strictly rely on the user. Jokes aside, I would actually be willing to bet that by 2027 the stupid hype will die down and nobody will actually use the term “AI PC” unironically, just like nobody brags about things being “optimized for IoT” or “powered by blockchain” anymore.
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#9
Vayra86
Report: Water is Wet, at least 3 out of 4 times.

wtf... Obviously if you plaster an AI sticker on every product its gonna get sold.
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#10
Darmok N Jalad
I'm curious on the research data on AI and consumer interest. It's not even if people "want" it, but I think there's a lot of fear and/or disdain for it. Do people want a personified PC? Even if that's not what "AI" is truly all about, I bet that's what most people think about when they hear the term "AI." AI is being presented like an annoying child that keeps saying "look at me" while doing something we aren't really interested in. There are real, practical uses for it, but it's for real research, not fake images and the like. At least people can write term papers without the value of having to do the work.
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#11
phanbuey
They made up their own marketing categories, lumped half the new laptops in it, and then went -- LOOK! People are buying new laptops...

They're trying so hard, it's cute.

My real question is... if I really wanted AI capability wouldnt i just buy a discrete GPU?

4050 is 60 TOPS(ish)? the top of the line AI CPU is a little over half of that - a $1400 Asus G17 from wallmart has a 4060 laptop gpu in it and you're 3 gens ahead of any CPU on the AI front.
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#12
stimpy88
And still no one will be using it.
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#13
Kn0xxPT
stimpy88And still no one will be using it.
In gaming scene, AI has made some "sense", like NPC, Co-Pilots in space genre... there are some applications of it...

For instance, F1 racing sim, has Voice Recognition for race strategy on the go and is a little step for make "AI" decisions/options for current race-style, there are more use-cases for that kind interactions...
SpaceFlight games ( StarCitizen for example ) its a very niche implementation for AI co-pilot actions because there is multicrew large ships.... instead of relying on "web" AI, it can be done on client.

But in the end I still think that going full steam to "AI" bang-wagon, is still very premature...
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#14
ExcuseMeWtf
But will those be "basic AI" or "premium AI" laptops? :roll:
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#15
stimpy88
Kn0xxPTIn gaming scene, AI has made some "sense", like NPC, Co-Pilots in space genre... there are some applications of it...

For instance, F1 racing sim, has Voice Recognition for race strategy on the go and is a little step for make "AI" decisions/options for current race-style, there are more use-cases for that kind interactions...
SpaceFlight games ( StarCitizen for example ) its a very niche implementation for AI co-pilot actions because there is multicrew large ships.... instead of relying on "web" AI, it can be done on client.

But in the end I still think that going full steam to "AI" bang-wagon, is still very premature...
Oh I absolutely think there is a place for AI in a gaming PC, or a student cheating on exams, but some slow-ass CPU that's not even a 10th of the speed of the GPU already sitting in the PC is not it.

AI is just a shiny bandwagon in search someone to chase it. It is unreliable, constantly hallucinates, is extremely left-wing biased, and its output can't ever be taken at face value and needs to be verified.

But powering NPC's in games, yeah, I can see that being a thing.
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#16
Wirko
EternitAt least 1/4 will be proper laptops.
But what processors are going to be in those laptops?
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#17
xorbe
Meaningless, there's an AI sticker on everything now.
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#18
thesmokingman
Darkhorse is Apple? lolol, Apple has been pumping money into media lately on top of their ridonkulous $110B buyback, smh.
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#19
evernessince
stimpy88AI is just a shiny bandwagon in search someone to chase it. It is unreliable, constantly hallucinates, is extremely left-wing biased, and its output can't ever be taken at face value and needs to be verified.
Oh the irony of such a statement is palpable.

Fun fact, everyone "hallucinates". You aren't seeing the world but your brain's rendition of the world. Not only is the information you take in subject to how your brain interprets it but you also only take in a fraction of all possible sensory information at any one time.

You should always be verifying information regardless of source, that should go without saying. If you needed to point that out I assume you consume information on a trust basis, which is a silly concept in the disinformation age.

Last, AI models are just layers of neurons connected with weights. Anyone can arrange these neurons and weights in any fashion they desire. Could an AI model be left-wing biased? Yes. Is all AI inherently left-wing biased? No, it entirely depends on the training data and any potential algorithmic or human bias among those developing the model. In order to understand these biases, you need to study how these systems are developed, how the data is collected, ect. As I understand it though, right-wing folk don't much like that idea given that's essentially what affirmative action and critical race theory are in the real world. You can't complain about systemic bais and then try to stamp out attempts to analyse and address it in the real world. You have to first recognize that all systems are susceptiable to bias, whether it be tought processes or governmental systems.
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#20
A&P211
If any laptop company puts a AI+ in their laptop name, it boosts sales 5%, add more (+) and it adds another 5%. Do a intel PR branding with the +++ signs.

AI+++¹⁰ Increased sales of 1000000000000000000000000%, everyone on earth will have 20 laptops.
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#21
trsttte
I'll do you one better, 4 out of 4 laptop pcs sold in 2027 will be ai laptop pcs just like they were for years now - I can't remember exactly but I think I started seeing AI as a marketing term as early as 2018, to control cooling and random tidbits like that.

Because at the end of the day, this is just a stupid and meaningless marketing term
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#22
Wirko
trsttteI'll do you one better, 4 out of 4 laptop pcs sold in 2027 will be ai laptop pcs just like they were for years now - I can't remember exactly but I think I started seeing AI as a marketing term as early as 2018, to control cooling and random tidbits like that.

Because at the end of the day, this is just a stupid and meaningless marketing term
Ah, Asus has had their AI Suite since... LGA775 days?
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#23
Minus Infinity
mb194dcIt's a load of BS, isn't it?
It's a metric crap ton of BS. I like to quantify these things so we're all on the same page.

Microshit are generating massive hype to promote their useless copilot (already shown to be useless and no better than Bing). Microshit haven't even told anyone what other use cases for this AI there is. They couldn't care less, they think this is the way they'll generate massive interest in windows 11 24H2 and windows 12. I'll bet they make windows 12 installation dependent on TPM 2.0 and 45 TOP NPU. OS won't boot without NPU.
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#24
AusWolf
DenverAs if people had a choice...
Exactly my thoughts. Intel CPUs have NPUs built-in, Nvidia GPUs have Tensor cores, and AMD laptops are basically non-existent. So where's the news?
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#25
Wirko
AusWolfExactly my thoughts. Intel CPUs have NPUs built-in, Nvidia GPUs have Tensor cores, and AMD laptops are basically non-existent. So where's the news?
The remaining 25% certainly is big news. Who would have thunk that in 2027 many laptops would be sold with 2023 generation processors?
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